Otago Daily Times

Peters’ return to Parliament shakes things up

- AUDREY YOUNG z Audrey Young is political editor of The New Zealand Herald.

JACINDA Ardern and Grant Robertson’s grip on Covid19 management loosened this week as Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters made a grand reentry into Wellington like the political swashbuckl­er he is.

Switching effortless­ly between playing the hero or the villain, depending on the issue, Winston Peters’ input had immediate effect.

He trod on toes, took different points of view and emphasis, and has shaken Labour out of its one stint this term of being utterly in control.

The Coalition is back.

The Deputy Prime Minister is back and so is the New Zealand First leader.

While Ardern has dampened prospects of a transtasma­n bubble saying it may have to operate with quarantine, Peters has been more gung ho and said it could happen without quarantine.

While Ardern has avoided making distinctio­ns between the health and economic tradeoffs in dealing with Covid19, Peters made it clear which side he is on

Revealing that the Ministry of Health had wanted a blanket shutdown of the border to all in a televised live speech to the country was designed to put him firmly on the other side.

He told Ardern in advance he was going to reveal the informatio­n, but it served as a warning to Labour that he won’t be playing happy families up to the September 19 election.

Peters has a unique position and voice within the Government and he is clearly going to use it.

His challenge is in asserting New Zealand First’s difference from Labour without creating a sense of instabilit­y.

The risks are low, given that Covid19 appears to have eliminated the Opposition as a viable Government, for the time being.

National has been slaughtere­d in the polls, as reinforced by the latest leaked poll from Labour’s pollsters, UMR, putting National at 29% and Labour on 55%.

Peters’ party has gained some advantage, despite being virtually invisible during the lockdown.

It has picked up National supporters who want to rally around the Government during the emergency but can’t make the leap to Labour.

But even on 6% Peters is also fighting for survival.

If 2002 were repeating itself, Peters would have reason to be confident. As National’s support slid 10 points over five months to 21%, New Zealand First was a beneficiar­y.

It went from about 2% to 10% at the election.

But comparison­s with 2002 are not necessaril­y valid. The economy was not an issue in 2002. The books were in surplus, unemployme­nt was 5%.

In this crisis, events move as quickly as they would normally do in a year.

Under Alert Level 4, with the country in a fragile state, it was easy to slavishly follow the Government line. Discipline was king. Anybody who raised questions was pilloried.

That applied to the Press Gallery which, on the whole, asked perfectly reasonable questions, and to

National which has been punished even when pointing out the blindly obvious — that Level 4 was extended because the systems weren’t ready for Level 3.

Peters’ return to the Wellington spotlight will automatica­lly put a greater spotlight on the health and economic tradeoff.

There should be greater acceptance of debate and legitimacy for Opposition MPs and their questions and some of that was evident in the past week.

There has been and will continue to be greater scrutiny of how Australia handled Covid19 and whether it ends up having less damage to its economy for the same outcome.

There has been and will continue to be greater debate about the legality of the initial lockdown order, albeit a retrospect­ive and largely academic debate.

And there has finally been some decent debate about the iwi checkpoint­s that sprang up around the country during Level 4.

Until now, it has been brushed under the carpet, Ardern simply dismissing concerns and saying it was all about people reacting to fear in their communitie­s.

Checkpoint­s were set up in various communitie­s — coincident­ally communitie­s where the Maori Party or Mana Movement is strongest — to stop travellers and find out if they had a good reason to be on the road.

After questions from Opposition MPs to police during the epidemic response select committee, it is now clear what happened.

The police had a choice to make: either disband them at the start of the lockdown, knowing it would lead to protest, arrests and potentiall­y a bigger problem; or for those that could not be persuaded to disband their unlawful checkpoint­s, effectivel­y legalise them by joining them.

They are now police and community checkpoint­s and with the imprimatur of the police, motorists are obliged to stop.

The police found a pragmatic way out of a potentiall­y inflammato­ry situation.

It is not ideal.

It makes the police look weak. But they calculated that a national state of emergency was not the time to rark up the situation.

They have said categorica­lly that such checkpoint­s must cease when the country goes to Alert Level 2.

Peters waded into the debate yesterday claiming, wrongly as it happens, that motorists are not required to stop and can drive right through.

He may not have caught up with the fact that the police now attend every checkpoint and have joint ownership of them.

Like the police, Peters found a way to support the checkpoint­s because not to do so would create bigger problems for the Government than to do so.

More tests will come, most likely after the Budget on May 14, which must be presented as a united front to tackle the effects of the virus.

But after that, political constraint­s will ease and Peters will be set loose again.

 ??  ?? Winston Peters
Winston Peters

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